iPod II--The Albums
119 posts
• Page 3 of 4 • 1, 2, 3, 4
Re: iPod II--The AlbumsBruce Conte is Victor (the dealer) Conte's brother. Believe Bruce was on many albums, Victor only one. Is he on the one you have, or is it just Bruce?
Re: iPod II--The AlbumsHaven't been marooned on a desert island but have lived in the Libyan desert for a coupla years with and old windup gramophone (phongraph?)
and about six 78s. Artie Shaw Gramercy 5(Summit ridge drive, Gloomy Sunday) Harry James(Trumpet Blues and Cantabile) Benny Goodman(can't remember) Knew every note and drumbeat. Sharpening needles was a problem.
Re: iPod II--The Albums"what's good about the beattles?"
Never heard of them. But there's a similarly named group, The Beatles, that dominated the years 64-70, because they crafted simple melodies and added some technical touches, which resulted in pop songs with universal appeal.
Re: iPod II--The Albums>"what's good about the beattles?"
Never heard of them. But there's a >similarly named group, The Beatles, that dominated the years 64-70, because >they crafted simple melodies and added some technical touches, which resulted >in pop songs with universal appeal. Don't even really consider myself a major fan and I have 230 tracks by them-probably more than double anyone else.
Re: iPod II--The AlbumsAs a huge fan, I realized one day that I became a teenager the year they came to America, they split up when I turned 20 and John Lennon was killed on my 30th birthday. Is it any wonder that I was forever transformed by their music?
Re: iPod II--The Albums>As a huge fan, I realized one day that I became a teenager the year they came
>to America, they split up when I turned 20 and John Lennon was killed on my >30th birthday. Is it any wonder that I was forever transformed by their music? I was standing in the same spot in the same bar when I heard about Lennon and Elvis. I'm told that the 20 somethings know where they were when Cobain finished off his multi year suicide(not unlike Elvis I suppose).
Re: iPod II--The AlbumsI was in Kobenhavn when Elvis died (my 1st Euro T&F trip, E Cup, W Cup). When people discovered we were American, they gave us lost of sympathy. I didn't much care, I was more of a Little Richard and Chuck Berry fan. Actually, then I was listening mostly to Dylan and classical.
Re: iPod II--The AlbumsYo! And I may need to modify my album list. I am listening to disc 2 of the 1st Dylan bootleg series and I might want to give up Blonde on Blonde. It has versions of BoB things e.g. Subterrian Homesick Blues which are slightly different from the original (20 years of schooling and they put you on the dayshift). Any list has pitfalls, and the beauty of this thread is that you can change your mind.
Re: iPod II--The Albums>Yo! And I may need to modify my album list. I am listening to disc 2 of the
>1st Dylan bootleg series and I might want to give up Blonde on Blonde. It has >versions of BoB things e.g. Subterrian Homesick Blues which are slightly >different from the original Here is someone who didn't even like the original: "In the rock world, this studious argument has been parlayed into the notion of "selling out." Following this logic, Bob Dylan cashed in his credibility when he moved away from "protest music" and began moaning about the idiosyncratically personal on such albums as "Blonde on Blonde,"" http://www.buffalonews.com/editorial/20 ... 006099.asp
Re: iPod II--The Albumsokay, what the hell is good about The Beatles?
bad vocals skills, simple lyrics......
Re: iPod II--The AlbumsMy dearest flipper,
Beauty being in the eye of the beholder, try not to feel so aggrieved that you cannot fathom their appeal. Perhaps they do not sing to you. But rest assured that they sing to millions, nay hundreds of millions of other commonfolk, and we are all better off for their melodies. Music, like most art, cannot be explained, only appreciated. Because you cannot appreciate them does not malign your aesthetic sense. Nor does our love of them demean ours. Here's a Beatles lyric to muse on: "All you need is love."
Re: iPod II--The Albums>>I have the Tower of Power album on which Bruce Conte is a musician- We Came
>To >Play.. Was the tag line?..."But wanted to make sure we won" Two real life songs by them: Back on the Streets Again Soul Vaccination Another musical project Victor was involved in: Pure Food & Drug Act
Re: iPod II--The Albums>okay, what the hell is good about The Beatles?
bad vocals skills, simple >lyrics...... Simple lyrics? Picture yourself in a boat on a river, With tangerine trees and marmalade skies Somebody calls you, you answer quite slowly, A girl with kaleidoscope eyes. Cellophane flowers of yellow and green, Towering over your head. Look for the girl with the sun in her eyes, And she’s gone. Lucy in the sky with diamonds. Follow her down to a bridge by a fountain Where rocking horse people eat marshmellow pies, Everyone smiles as you drift past the flowers, That grow so incredibly high. Newspaper taxis appear on the shore, Waiting to take you away. Climb in the back with your head in the clouds, And you’re gone. Lucy in the sky with diamonds, Picture yourself on a train in a station, With plasticine porters with looking glass ties, Suddenly someone is there at the turnstyle, The girl with the kaleidoscope eyes.
Re: iPod II--The AlbumsBeautiful as the lyrics are, Lennon - despite later demurrals - was writing about an LSD trip, so perhaps that was not their finest hour. Here's another:
Elenor Rigby (Lennon/McCartney) Ah, look at all the lonely people Ah, look at all the lonely people Eleanor Rigby picks up the rice in the church where a wedding has been Lives in a dream Waits at the window, wearing the face that she keeps in a jar by the door Who is it for? All the lonely people Where do they all come from ? All the lonely people Where do they all belong ? Father McKenzie writing the words of a sermon that no one will hear No one comes near. Look at him working. Darning his socks in the night when there's nobody there What does he care? All the lonely people Where do they all come from? All the lonely people Where do they all belong? Eleanor Rigby died in the church and was buried along with her name Nobody came Father McKenzie wiping the dirt from his hands as he walks from the grave No one was saved All the lonely people Where do they all come from? All the lonely people Where do they all belong?
Re: iPod II--The Albums>okay, what the hell is good about The Beatles?
bad vocals skills, simple lyrics......< but the best popular music that has been written by anyone in the past 50 years. Nobody has equalled the sophistication of their music and the instrumentation that they brought to their recordings. Next to them, almost all rock music pales. They brought popular music to a new plane. Alas, they not proven to be the progenitors of a new generation of musicians. If you look carefully at the melodies and harmonies of what has followed them, you find few who ever approached their level of achievement and none who ever did so consistently.
Re: iPod II--The Albums>Gotta delurk for a shot at this one.
Nirvana -- Nevermind It has already started. Cobain died on April 5, 1994 and this month's Spin devotes about half the mag to him because of the upcoming 10 year anniversary. I'm told that people of a certain vintage can tell you where they were and what they were doing on that date. tandfman, if you're out there, my guess is that you can't. Neither can I...
Re: iPod II--The AlbumsThat's funny, should we feel sorry for him or something?
Re: iPod II--The Albums>That's funny, should we feel sorry for him or something?
tandfman or Cobain? Quite frankly, knowing where you were on the day he died should not be something you should be admitting to anyone.
Re: iPod II--The AlbumsThis post is really by way of a response to Garry Hill's "unfortunate names" post:
> This belongs on the iPod thread, but now that I think of it, I once had a vinyl by a Dick Hymans titled something like "Electric Eclectic"; one of the first exponents of the Moog, and early synthesizer. Very new-age like, even though it dated to the early '70s. And of course even the casual Beatles fan will know that 'Abbey Road', recorded on the cusp of the 1970s, is full of synthesizer. I think it puts the album at slightly higher risk of becoming a period piece, as compared to their lovely jangly guitar work of the mid-1960s -- mbeep beep yeah! So, a blasphemous thought: did the Beatles break up just in time? For compliance purposes, here is my list, in order of when they pop into my head, limit one album per artist. 1. Beatles - Revolver (Love them all, but Pepper too melancholy; Abbey Road--Lennon was right--too rock-opera-ish; White Album, too solo) 2. Elvis Costello - Get Happy!! 3. Beck - Mutations 4. Liz Phair - Whip Smart 5. Dylan & the Band - Before the Flood 6. Glenn Gould - Bach Italian Concerto 7. Dave Brubeck Quartet - Jazz Impressions of the USA 8. Graham Parker - Squeezing Out Sparks 9. The OC - Mix 1 10. Brian Wilson - Smile
Re: iPod II--The AlbumsNot sure if my post was referencing this (which I had forgotten existed!) or iPod I, our longest thread ever. (thanks mjd)
Re: iPod II--The Albums>iPod I, our longest thread ever.
Only because we don't have Renato Canova worshippers here.
Re: iPod II--The AlbumsDid this just get moved from the current board? Only reason I ask is that the "latest post" time is out of order now(won't be anymore though).
Re: iPod II--The Albums>the "latest post" time is out of order now
And that really drives you nuts, doesn't it?
Re: iPod II--The AlbumsThe Who--Who's Next
The Clash--London Calling Public Enemy--Fear of a Black Planet Explosions In The Sky--Friday Night Lights Dropkick Murphys--Sing Loud, Sing Proud! John Coltrane--Blue Train Pink Floyd--The Wall Derek and the Dominoes--Layla Bob Dylan--Blonde on Blonde and we can't forget: The Beatles--Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band edited to make a change and to follow the rules. And gh, does jazz couint as classical? Last edited by sluhtaf on Wed Mar 30, 2005 8:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: iPod II--The Albums(although I
>listen to classical stations regularly I never know what the hell I'm listening >to album-wise...what a jock, I guess) And you guys have a really good classical station, the USC KMozart 105.1. Beats the drivel we have up here in the bay area. To be fair, I only listen to the radio in the car, and mostly, I couldn't hear an entire piece should KDFC deign to play it. Have to get them ads in! On trips, I take CDs, or listen to NPR, but with my luck, its usually car talk or Garrison.
Re: iPod II--The AlbumsTrash KDFC all you like, but it's apparently the most successful classical music station in the country and has doubled its listenership since it went "classical light." I think we should be thankful for small favors and recognize that we have been able to actually retain a classical station, something which otherwise apparently wasn't going to happen
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f ... BFH5O1.DTL (note also explanation of why Met was dropped)
1. Allman Brothers Band: Live at Fillmore East
2. Crosby Stills Nash and Young: Deja Vu 3. Santana: Abraxas 4. Stevie Ray Vaughan: Soul to Soul 5: Transiberian Orchestra: Christmas Eve and Other Stories (I'd rather have the box set) 6. Eric Clapton: The Blues (not a greatest hits CD) 7. Jimi Hendrix: Band of Jypsys 8. Jeff Beck: Blow by Blow 9. Jefferson Airplane: Volunteers 10. Easy Rider (Soundtrack)
119 posts
• Page 3 of 4 • 1, 2, 3, 4
Who is onlineUsers browsing this forum: No registered users and 9 guests |